this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2023
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Itβs scale.
Scale is the enemy of social networks. All of them, including Lemmy.
Letβs say 0.1% of the population are just straight up assholes who ruin everything.
If you only got 100 people on a site, no one is an asshole.
1000 people? Well now you got that asshole Andy in the group. Fucking Andy. But we can deal with him.
But we scale up to 1,000,000? Well now you got 1000 fucking assholes to deal with!
If my math is right, it should be 1,000 assholes at the end.
Stop being an asshole Andy!
Yeah. Morning math got me stupid. lol. Edited!
I don't want to be that asshole Andy. But 0.1% of 1,000,000 is 1000. :P
https://imgur.io/5qnfUdo?r
Derp! Thanks!!
Well, thanks a bunch, Andy.
So you're saying it's proportional all the way up and not a big deal, or people love assholes and upvote all their material and comments for greater proportional impact?
If anything I would argue that the first and early adopters are less likely to be assholes, to where eventually you reach that tipping point and move back towards the average, which feels worse in what is a collection of niche communities, because the average engages slightly different content than early adopters.
Moreso, I think it's just confirmation bias. OP is hyper sensitive to a change in the culture so every example of it weighs a little more.
To be clear, like most things, I don't think it's one thing or another; a little from A, a little from B, and probably a slew of other factors.
The bigger an asshole someone is, the more theyre going to comment....
One asshole is just one asshole, but 100 assholes are going to make more comments than 1,000 normal users.
Which makes it look like there are 10x as many assholes as there really is.
I want to jump in and say that people do love assholes. You need look no further than celebrities and the people that hang on their every word.